Más contenido relacionado La actualidad más candente (20) Similar a Why One Number Is Not Enough (20) Why One Number Is Not Enough1. ™
Customer Loyalty:
Why one number is not enough
David Jackson
Clicktools Ltd
Clarendon Enterprise Centre
Post Office Road
Bournenmouth
BH1 1BL
UK
Tel: + 44 1202 313645
www.clicktools.com
© Copyright Clicktools Ltd. 2006
2. Why one number is not enough Page 2 of 6
About Clicktools
Clicktools is in the business of improving customer centricity. Our on demand
software enables companies to:
Collect information at key customer touch points
•
Analyse and act on information to improve customer experience
•
Integrate with CRM to provide one customer view
•
Founded in 2000, Clicktools provides a range of products and services that help
companies improve their customer centricity. Customers use Clicktools to gather
information across multiple channels, including web, email, phone, post, mobile
phone, digital TV, IVR, kiosks and handheld devices.
In addition to the powerful on demand software, Clicktools and its partners support
customers in a range of ways:
CRM integration. Using our out of he box CRM integration to enable clients
•
to both drive survey deployment and see survey results in their CRM system.
Feedback design, deployment and management services – management of
•
all your feedback activity.
Support services – training, bespoke survey & dashboard development and
•
systems integration.
Business consultancy – support for management teams seeking to improve
•
their customer experience from Clicktools and our specialist consultancy
partners.
We serve leading companies, large and small, seeking to measure and improve
their customer experience. Our clients include Amcor, the British Army, National
Gallery, O2, Procter and Gamble, Rackspace, Royal Bank of Scotland, Shell, Unisys,
Yamaha, Yorkshire Building Society.
© Copyright Clicktools Ltd. 2007
3. Why one number is not enough Page 3 of 6
Loyalty expert Frederick F. Reichheld's article in the Harvard Business Review, The One
Number You Need to Grow (December 2003) and his subsequent book “The Ultimate
Question”, explores issues around measuring customer loyalty. Reichheld's research, linking
a customer's willingness to recommend a firm with its revenue growth over three years,
enumerates what many executives have intuitively known for many years: the power of
positive word of mouth. The link between recommendation and loyalty is easy to
understand: people are unlikely to recommend something they themselves are not pleased
with and would therefore buy again given the need. The research seems compelling, and as
an advocate of customer-focused organizations and measurement of customer experience, I
am supportive of anything that reinforces my beliefs.
In a world where the reach and effectiveness of advertising is diminishing,
recommendations take on greater importance. Research by the Future Foundation shows
the shifting influence of recommendations vis-à-vis advertising.
If the trend continues and experience grows in importance as a vehicle for generating
business, organisations will have to pay more attention to building experiences that inspire
recommendations. There is little doubt, therefore, that the subject is of real importance to
many organisations, but it should come with a health warning—it is a double-edged sword.
The problem lies in the literal interpretation that some companies put on it, thinking that
they need only one question in their survey. This is just downright wrong and is not what
the article or the book says.
Why gather feedback?
There are two primary reasons for investing the time and money to measure: to track
performance and to improve performance.
Tracking performance
The article centres on the relationship between the number of people willing to
recommend an organisation and its revenue growth. It is a useful way for management to
track performance and may correlate to some aspects of financial performance.
Management information and tracking is, however, only one purpose of feedback and, I
would argue, a secondary reason.
I believe that there is a causal relationship between advocacy and financial performance,
but one number does not prove that. Correlation and causal relationships are very
different. To know something is a causal relationship, I have to isolate other variables that
might affect the outcome. A telecoms supplier once reported research that showed that cat
owners made the most phone calls. Correlation, yes; causal relationship, doubtful.
The success of an organisation is a complex issue and rarely the result of one factor.
Growth might be the result of higher advertising spend, an under-supplied market, a
patented product or innovation in distribution. This is, of course, reflected in the
customer's perception of the company, but tracking one number does not say why the
customer would recommend the company. Knowing how you are doing—tracking
performance—is less important than knowing why you are doing—managing performance.
© Copyright Clicktools Ltd. 2007
4. Why one number is not enough Page 4 of 6
How would you feel if an airline pilot announced that on your next flight, she was going to
track only altitude? Well I'd feel good that she knew we were not too close to the ground
but a little concerned that she wasn't watching the remaining fuel load or the speed and
direction we were travelling. Complex systems require multiple measures to track them.
The key is having an effective summary and access to the detail when appropriate.
It is also important to understand that insight usually comes from putting different data
together and looking at any relationships. I would argue for having more numbers (within
reason), not one.
I believe that Reichheld is right in focusing on advocacy rather than satisfaction.
Satisfaction is much measured but a poor indication of performance. To test the value of
satisfaction, the next time your spouse or friend cooks you a meal and asks, quot;How was it?quot;
say you were quot;satisfied,quot; or even quot;very satisfied.quot; Be sure to duck when the frying pan flies
at you. People are not impressed with satisfaction, although it is still the most common
question in customer surveys.
Remember also that, as the article points out, willingness to recommend is not always a
good correlate of growth. In some industries—typically business-to-business environments
where choice of supplier is constrained—it can be a weak correlate.
Improving performance
The primary reason for gathering feedback is to identify and prioritize the improvements
that will increase advocacy and repurchase intention - loyalty. Most recommendations are
the result of positive experiences, so improving the experience is key to improving
performance. The real correlate of interest, therefore, is that between
advocacy/repurchase intention and attributes of the experience.
Good feedback stimulates the improvements that drive up a customer's willingness to
recommend. Any sports coach will tell you that the only way to change the score is to
improve the way the team performs and plays the game. You don't change the score by
looking at the scoreboard. In a complex, multi-faceted customer relationship,
understanding how each part of the team is performing is vital. Companies need to
understand their strengths and weaknesses from the customer's perspective.
Enterprise Rent-a-Car (the inspiration for the work described in Reichheld's article) suggests
that this information is best collected by a text question asking about the quality of the
rental experience. While this will provide information, capturing this by an open text
question alone (as the article suggests) is problematic. Analysis is time-consuming and
provides no view of the scale of problems across the organization. This can be achieved by
categorizing and coding the responses, but this adds time and cost to the feedback process.
A second problem with open questions is that they produce the lowest response rates of any
question type. Even in phone surveys, the likelihood of getting a meaningful comment is
low.
The people who will readily provide a comment are those whose experience has been either
very good or very bad and in this respect, Enterprise's approach is consistent with its focus
on those with a high propensity to recommend. It does not, however, provide the means to
readily identify the priorities for improvement.
Effective Feedback
Feedback will, typically, uncover a number of areas where customers want improvements.
In any organization, the demands on time and money always outstrip their availability.
Resource allocation is a critical activity. Good feedback, combined with other data, can
make a significant contribution.
© Copyright Clicktools Ltd. 2007
5. Why one number is not enough Page 5 of 6
In selecting where to invest in improving the customer experience, all managers want to
know where they will get the best return. There are four pieces of information needed to
inform this choice:
What attributes of the customer experience matter most to customers?
•
How are we doing compared to the competition on these attributes?
•
What is the likely impact on revenue by improving the different attributes?
•
What is the cost of implementing the improvement?
•
A good feedback program provides the answers to the first two questions and a significant
input to the third. It is not a perfect science, requiring assumptions to be made, but then
that is true of almost all ROI cases.
Experience feedback, collected across a range of event driven and relationship surveys,
tests what matters and elicits competitive performance across the customer journey,
focusing on the attributes that matter to the customer. These are unique to each
organization but typically address being easy and nice to do business with; the quality of
the core product/service; and the quality and availability of support and help.
Once you have identified the importance and competitive performance of the experience
attributes, it is possible to calculate the customer base at risk or the improvement
opportunity value for each of the attributes. Do this by multiplying the percentage of
customers who rate that attribute low or high (low for at risk calculations, high for
opportunity calculations) by the average customer spend. To improve the calculations, use
segmented feedback results and values.
The chart above shows an example using profit at risk, but the same method applies if using
revenue at risk or profit or revenue opportunity.
Gathering the feedback for such exercises does not require long, complex surveys. The data
can be collected across a range of surveys, each focused on one part of the customer
journey. This has the added advantage of focusing questions on the activities of the
customer at a given point. In a business-to-business context, this is especially important, as
people often do not experience the whole journey.
Beyond one question
If you want to build a feedback program that provides the data you need to drive
improvements, here are a few pointers, based on our experience at Clicktools of working
with many companies in measuring and improving the customer experience.
Think quot;program,quot; not survey. Feedback is one part of a vital operational tool. Start with
what information you need to drive improvements and look at it as a program of activity.
© Copyright Clicktools Ltd. 2007
6. Why one number is not enough Page 6 of 6
Consider multiple surveys to gather the feedback you need, but ensure that they work
together in a coherent feedback architecture. The starting point for your program is the
customer journey and what matters to your customers at the key points along the way.
Focus on the action, not the questions. Surveys cost money; acting on the results generates
the return. A good survey is one that drives actions. That means having owners for the
questions in a survey. If a question doesn't have an owner who is responsible for improving
performance, don't ask it. If the issue is not important to the customer, don't ask it—don't
confuse what you are interested in with what matters to customers.
Provide role-relevant information. Well-designed feedback generates two types of
information:
Information to drive improvement
•
Information for measurement
•
Provide people with information on which they can act and no more. Make sure that people
have the skills and incentives to act on the information in a timely manner. A small number
of quantitative questions will help people quickly identify areas of strength and weakness
and point them to where they should focus their improvements.
Remember that retention operates one customer at a time. Good feedback provides
opportunities to identify and address individual service failures rapidly as well as providing
aggregated data for process improvement.
Keep surveys short, timely and relevant to the recipient. Many surveys are far too long and
ask questions of people that have no experience of the interaction. Focusing on what
matters to the recipient at that stage of the process helps to keep the survey short and
relevant, driving up response rates. Don't ask questions of people that are not involved in
that stage.
Beware survey overload. Asking every customer about every interaction will annoy
customers and be unnecessarily expensive. Use sampling and business rules to narrow down
the audience.
Communicate with customers and staff. As in any project, good communication is essential.
Sell the benefits to customers and staff: Focus on what's in it for them. Put together a
program of communication for the time before the surveys go out, the time immediately
after the surveys and notification of results and actions.
I want to build an organization where each and every one of our customers sings our
praises. I know I can do that only by knowing what matters to all of them and how well we
deliver. With this information spread across the organization, I can keep staff focused on
continuously driving up the quality of the experience we deliver and, thereby, impress
customers enough to get them to continue to recommend and repurchase. For me, one
number is not enough.
© Copyright Clicktools Ltd. 2007